The previous version (`3.12`) is 7 years old and does not support the
newest Python 3 versions. This causes issues to move certain test
targets (which depends on `pyyaml`) to Python 3 when some CI environment
(e.g. `arm64v8/debian:11`) does not have Python 2 installed. And in
general, we should move away from Python 2. Thus, updated `pyyaml` to
the latest version.
This hopefully should also fix the
`prod:grpc/core/master/linux/arm64/grpc_bazel_test_c_cpp` job breakage.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Rolls forward https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/33871
Second and third commits here fix internal build issues
In particular, add a `// IWYU pragma: no_include <ares_build.h>` since
`ares.h` [includes that
anyways](bad62225b7/include/ares.h (L23))
(and seems unlikely for that to change since it would be breaking)
Normally, c-ares related fds are destroyed after all DNS resolution is
finished in [this code
path](c82d31677a/src/core/ext/filters/client_channel/resolver/dns/c_ares/grpc_ares_wrapper.cc (L210)).
Also there are some fds that c-ares may fail to open or write to
initially, and c-ares will close them internally before grpc ever knows
about them.
But if:
1) c-ares opens a socket and successfully writes a request on it
2) then a subsequent read fails
Then c-ares will close the fd in [this code
path](bad62225b7/src/lib/ares_process.c (L740)),
but gRPC will have a reference on the fd and will still use it
afterwards.
Fix here is to leverage the c-ares socket-override API to properly track
fd ownership between c-ares and grpc.
Related: internal issue b/292203138
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
This PR implements a c-ares based DNS resolver for EventEngine with the
reference from the original
[grpc_ares_wrapper.h](../blob/master/src/core/ext/filters/client_channel/resolver/dns/c_ares/grpc_ares_wrapper.h).
The PosixEventEngine DNSResolver is implemented on top of that. Tests
which use the client channel resolver API
([resolver.h](../blob/master/src/core/lib/resolver/resolver.h#L54)) are
ported, namely the
[resolver_component_test.cc](../blob/master/test/cpp/naming/resolver_component_test.cc)
and the
[cancel_ares_query_test.cc](../blob/master/test/cpp/naming/cancel_ares_query_test.cc).
The WindowsEventEngine DNSResolver will use the same EventEngine's
grpc_ares_wrapper and will be worked on next.
The
[resolve_address_test.cc](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/test/core/iomgr/resolve_address_test.cc)
which uses the iomgr
[DNSResolver](../blob/master/src/core/lib/iomgr/resolve_address.h#L44)
API has been ported to EventEngine's dns_test.cc. That leaves only 2
tests which use iomgr's API, notably the
[dns_resolver_cooldown_test.cc](../blob/master/test/core/client_channel/resolvers/dns_resolver_cooldown_test.cc)
and the
[goaway_server_test.cc](../blob/master/test/core/end2end/goaway_server_test.cc)
which probably need to be restructured to use EventEngine DNSResolver
(for one thing they override the original grpc_ares_wrapper's free
functions). I will try to tackle these in the next step.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
This test has been disabled for a long time now due to flakiness, but
it's now causing problems with the import. And stress tests don't
provide positive ROI anyway, so let's just get rid of it.
Note that the plugin is still under `grpc::internal` namespace and not
under `experimental` intentionally.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
This reverts the following PRs: #32692#33087#33093#33427#33568
These changes seem to have introduced some flaky crashes. Reverting
while I investigate.
As per gRFC A58, when WRR sees a subchannel report READY, it reset the
non_empty_since value, thus restarting the blackout period. However,
there were two cases where we were incorrectly triggering this code:
1. When WRR got an updated address list that contained addresses that
were already present on the old list and whose subchannels were already
in READY state, the initial notification for those subchannels on the
new list was READY, which incorrectly triggered resetting the
non_empty_since value.
2. Due to a bug in the outlier_detection policy, whenever an update was
propagated down through the OD policy without actually enabling OD, it
would incorrectly send a duplicate connectivity state notification for
the subchannels. This meant that a subchannel that was already in state
READY would report READY again, which would also incorrectly trigger
resetting the non_empty_since value.
This PR makes two changes:
1. Fix the bug in outlier_detection that caused it to generate the
spurious duplicate READY updates.
2. Fix WRR to reset the non_empty_since value when a subchannel goes
READY only if the subchannel has seen a previous state update and only
if that previous state was not READY. (The duplicate READY notifications
should not actually happen anymore now that the OD policy has been
fixed, but better to be defensive.)
Fixes b/290983884.
In real services most of our time ends up in the `Read1()` function,
which populates one byte into the bit buffer.
Change this to read in as many as possible bytes at a time into that
buffer.
Additionally, generate all possible (to some depth) parser geometries,
and add a benchmark for them. Run that benchmark and select the best
geometry for decoding base64 strings (since this is the main use-case).
(gives about a 30% speed boost parsing base64 then huffman encoded
random binary strings)
---------
Co-authored-by: ctiller <ctiller@users.noreply.github.com>
More work on the dualstack backend design:
- Now that all petiole policies have been changed to delegate to
pick_first, outlier detection no longer needs to eject via the
subchannel's raw connectivity state; it can now eject only via the
health state. See #33340.
- This also removes the now-unnecessary hack to explicitly disable
outlier detection in pick_first. See #33336.
More work on the dualstack backend design:
- Change ring_hash policy to delegate to pick_first instead of creating
subchannels directly.
- Note that, as mentioned in the WIP gRFC, because we lazily create the
pick_first child policies, so there's no need to swap over to a new list
as an atomic whole. As a result, we don't use the endpoint_list library
in this policy; instead, we just update a map in-place.
- Remove now-unused subchannel_list library.
More work on the dualstack backend design:
- Change round_robin to delegate to pick_first instead of creating
subchannels directly.
- Change pick_first such that when it is the child of a petiole policy,
it will unconditionally start a health watch.
- Change the client-side health checking code such that if client-side
health checking is not enabled, it will return the subchannel's raw
connectivity state.
- As part of this, we introduce a new endpoint_list library to be used
by petiole policies, which is intended to replace the existing
subchannel_list library. The only policy that will still directly
interact with subchannels is pick_first, so the relevant parts of the
subchannel_list functionality have been copied directly into that
policy. The subchannel_list library will be removed after all petiole
policies are updated to delegate to pick_first.
Add bazel dependency on opentelemetry-cpp.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
The address attribute interface was intended to provide a mechanism to
pass attributes separately from channel args, for values that do not
affect subchannel behavior and therefore do not need to be present in
the subchannel key, which does include channel args. However, the
mechanism as currently designed is fairly clunky and is probably not the
direction we will want to go in the long term.
Eventually, we will want some mechanism for registering channel args,
which would provide a cleaner way to indicate that a given channel arg
should not be used in the subchannel key, so that we don't need a
completely different mechanism. For now, this PR is just doing an
interim step, which is to establish a special channel arg key prefix to
indicate that an arg is not needed in the subchannel key.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
The following bugs are fixed:
* Missing ExecCtx in event engine endpoints and listeners
* Ref counting issue with iomgr endpoint which causes crashes in
overloaded situations
The PR includes a test which triggers these bugs by simulating an
overloaded system.
- Switched from yapf to black
- Reconfigure isort for black
- Resolve black/pylint idiosyncrasies
Note: I used `--experimental-string-processing` because black was
producing "implicit string concatenation", similar to what described
here: https://github.com/psf/black/issues/1837. While currently this
feature is experimental, it will be enabled by default:
https://github.com/psf/black/issues/2188. After running black with the
new string processing so that the generated code merges these `"hello" "
world"` strings concatenations, then I removed
`--experimental-string-processing` for stability, and regenerated the
code again.
To the reviewer: don't even try to open "Files Changed" tab 😄 It's
better to review commit-by-commit, and ignore `run black and isort`.
<!--
If you know who should review your pull request, please assign it to
that
person, otherwise the pull request would get assigned randomly.
If your pull request is for a specific language, please add the
appropriate
lang label.
-->
Following improvements were made to `orca_oob` interop test to increase
compatibility and stability:
1. Timeout was increased to 10s (see #33098)
2. Server will block clients trying to run this test concurrently.
3. Data is cleared in the beginning of the call.
Added tests involve:
1. Checking the # of logger invocations with multiple RBACs in the
chain.
2. Verifying content in audit context with action and audit condition
permutations.
3. Confirm custom logger and built-in logger configurations are working.
4. Confirm the feature is protected by the environment variable.
---------
Co-authored-by: rockspore <rockspore@users.noreply.github.com>
- switch to json_object_loader for config parsing
- use `absl::string_view` instead of `const char*` for cert provider
names
- change cert provider registry to use a map instead of a vector
- remove unused mesh_ca cert provider factory